William St Clair is perhaps the only soldier to have left a continuous
account of his experiences day by day from the moment of joining up in
1914, through the years of horror in the trenches, to the march into
Germany in 1919 and the long aftermath of trying to make sense of what
had happened. A private in the medical corps, St Clair wrote daily
letters, sometimes more, to his future wife Jane. Often scribbled under
fire, and sent in the green envelopes that were exempt from censorship,
they tell of the famous battles of Loos, the Somme, and Passchendaele,
as they happened, with excruciating vividness. They speak too of
aspirations, of conversations, of literature, and of love.
Published for the first time, these raw, truthful, and deeply moving.
letters give us what we have not properly had before, the voice of an
ordinary soldier who is also a wonderful writer. The book takes its
title from the village of St Julien in Flanders, where, in a captured
German pill box, the mind of young soldier was transformed, an event
that he later turned into an award-winning play.